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Friday, 7 April, 2000, 16:14 GMT 17:14 UK

Turtle mania causes welfare headache

The Ninja Turtles: All the rage in the late 80s

Animal welfare workers are receiving anxious phone calls from people who bought tiny terrapins at the height of the Teenage Ninja Turtle craze in the 1980s and are now unable to cope with the adult-sized creatures.

The Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is keeping two large terrapins at its centre in Lothian after they were abandoned by their owners.

The SSPCA estimates that thousands of children bought the reptiles when the Ninja Turtles Raphael, Leonardo, Donnatello and Michaelangelo were at the peak of their popularity.

Then, the pets were about the size of a 50p piece, and cost just a few pounds, the same creatures have now grown many times in size.

The real thing

The centre says it is taking up to five calls a week from owners whose terrapins are breaking the glass in the tanks meant to contain them.

Staff have named the rescued terrapins Raphael and Donnatello. The former was found in the shallow waters of the River Forth earlier this week, while its partner had been dumped in Edinburgh's Union Canal.

SSPCA spokeswoman, Angela Walton, said the charity was finding it almost
impossible to find good homes for them.

"Raphael and Donnatello would have been bought when Ninja Turtles were all the rage, and they have obviously been abandoned.

'Cute, wee animals'

"Children were desperate for them when the Mutant Turtles were the in thing, but the same cute wee animals have grown and become very difficult to deal with.

"The wee boy who came out of the pet shop with a tiny little pet has left school, grown up and moved on, and the terrapin has become huge and too difficult to care for," she said.

"Some of them have grown so large and powerful that they are physically
smashing their way out of their tanks."

Donatello: Namesake of abandoned terrapin

Miss Walton said terrapins, which are native to South America and South Asia,
could live for up to 30 years but needed specialist care.